There's a fair amount of news out there. I use Google Reader to capture it all; however, it still can't make sense of the noise.
News and events are viral; they disseminate quickly throughout the internet. Take for example what happened today. Google accidentally labeled the whole internet as malware. Below every search result there was a nice warning: "This site may harm your computer." Even Google.com was labeled harmful. Interesting mistake.
While the dust settled and Google fixed the glitch, everyone blogged about it. Everyone. No everyone. I looked at Google News and there are 407 articles from 89 sources about the story.
As I went through my Google Reader articles for the day I heard about it at least 5 times. Makes sense, I follow tech blogs. But we can do better. A nice feature for Google Reader would be analyzing the content of my unread items and showing the unread articles by story. A way for it to say, "this article about Google malware is similar to these four; look at all of them now." Or one step further, look at your unread item by category: iPhone, Kindle, Google, etc...
This is hard; language is complcated. The fortunate part is that we know much more about the articles then what they say. We know when they were published, what sites and press releases they link to, the main subject (the tags), and the source. These content clues along with learning from the users - allowing them to teach the computer and say "Yes they're similar." or "No they're not" - you could build a very good content grouping engine.
Google News does it on a larger scale with the "All news and articles" link below each result. Let's try and leverage that for Google Reader.
Saturday, January 31, 2009
The RSS Clutter
Back from Baltimore - Staying in.
Back from Baltimore. Went the Lexington Market, got crap cake, saw some fish, saw some dolphins, and headed back.
Stopped at Wagshal's Marktet on the way back. Got delmonico steak for tonight and the superbowl package - 24 wings, 2 lbs ground beef for chilli, 6 bratwurst, and 6 kielbasa - for tomorrow. The steak melted in my mouth, and I'm sure the superbowl package will come through tomorrow.
In the car on the way back, we rolled along an elevated 95 - above the warehouse and vacants of industrial Baltimore - and watched the sun fade behind the trees; Bruce Springsteen coming through the stereo was just right. Currently, this song makes the moment:
Ooh La La (LP Version) - Faces
Staying in tonight, just what I need.
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Twitter and Breaking News Search
TweetNews:
This is an old hat by now in the blogosphere, but using Yahoo! BOSS and Twitter an yahoo engineer was able to make an excellent breaking news search engine. The tweets on Twitter measure freshness and the Yahoo! BOSS leverages the relevant search results and articles, so what you get are articles about what people are talking about now. On his blog you can download the source and play around with it. Or try it out at TweetNews.
Google News RSS:
I spent sometime fiddling with GoogleNews to put together a decent search about bicycles. Then I was able to grab a RSS feed for the search (click the RSS link on the left side of the screen). Now get updates on bicycle news from across the country in my google reader. One disappointment was that I wasn't able to make it prioritize certain sites like WashCycle or Streetsblog, but maybe I should make a Yahoo! BOSS mashup for that.
Borough Invasion
How many people did you meet from Brooklyn during inauguration weekend? I met a million.
Sunday, January 18, 2009
Hopes and Dreams
Now I am going to see Beyonce for reals. Seriously I am. Inauguration Concert.
Hopefully Will.i.am appears via hologram.
holla-gramYO!
Saturday: Single Ladies
Stuck in our heads all day. "Uh Oh Oh...." on repeat, but no Single Ladies to be heard.
Then, there we were playing grown up - wearing suits, dresses, and dinning with red wine - listening electro-indie pop-all star-fashion darlings MGMT. Transition to Beyonce; Single Ladies; hit it; spontaneous dance party. We shook it.
Unfortunately, I busy enough getting down that I fumbled my phone and lost my opportunity to capture the moment forever on the microSD card in my phone.
Friday, January 16, 2009
Friday: Single Ladies
I listened to Single Ladies twice at work. I watched the music video once. The music video, similar to the song, rules. I wish I could embed it on my blog, but youtube user "beyonce" has disabled embedding. Lame.
Anyways, it was a mad dance party. See below:
Well, and I'm listening to it right now.
That makes four times, and I haven't even made it to Wonkette's Patriotic Inaugural Ball.
This Weekend One Thing is Certain
This is Inauguration Weekend. Social calendars are full with galas, balls, dinner parties, and concerts.
Only one thing is certain: you will hear Single Ladies.
I'm going to learn the dance, and each time I hear it I'll live blog the occasion. Stay tuned. Until then watch the music video over and over and over and over....
Sunday, January 11, 2009
Pump it Up
There was a time - a glorious time, in the early 90's before iPods, before small stylish iPod speakers - where loud music blarred, pop, and fuzzed out of boomboxes. With cardboard and a boombox propped on your shoulder spontaneous dance parties could held anywhere: an alley, parking lot, parks, the sidewalk.
Monday, January 05, 2009
The Cheapest Car Insurance
Allstate claims customers who switched save an average of a couple odd hundred dollars. Of course they saved money. Who would switch providers if they didn't save money?
1 person could have saved $318 by switching while 9 were given quotes the same or higher than their current provider. It doesn't quite add up.